A collection of runoffs from last month’s election, including the race for Louisiana secretary of state, will be settled Saturday (Dec. 8), along with a smattering of local fiscal requests. Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m.

A review of statewide elections and local ballots follows. To determine your polling location, and review a sample for your precinct, visit the Geaux Vote section of the Secretary of State’s website.

CHRIS GRANGER

A voter receives an "I Voted" sticker featuring artist George Rodrigue's Blue Dog on Election Day in New Orleans on Tuesday, November 8, 2016. (Photo by Chris Granger, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune)

Statewide

The runoff for secretary of state is between Kyle Ardoin, a Republican, and Gwen Collins-Greenup, a Democrat.

Ardoin has held the post on an interim basis since May when he was appointed to take over from Tom Schedler, who resigned amid a sexual harassment scandal involving an employee in his office. Although troubles over a voting machines contract have emerged during his brief tenure, Ardoin is touting his experience with the state agency, where he became first assistant in 2010.

Collins-Greenup, who works for the public school system in East Feliciana Parish, made the runoff by matching Ardoin with 20 percent of the vote in the Nov. 6 primary. Her lack of campaign resources kept her out of most forums with other candidates. Collins-Greenup, who graduated from Southern University Law Center and will sit for the bar exam in February, has stressed a platform of voters' rights in her campaign for the office that oversees elections in Louisiana.

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Wearing appropriate footwear on a rainy day in south Louisiana, James Firios wears white shrimp boots as he votes on Election Day in New Orleans on Nov. 8, 2016. (Photo by Chris Granger, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)

Jefferson Parish

Three seats are left to decide on the Jefferson Parish School Board: Districts 2, 3 and 5.

In Harahan, three City Council members will be chosen from a field of five who advanced to the runoff.

Residents in Fire Protection District No. 6, which includes portions of the west bank near Gretna and Harvey, are being asked to renew a 25-mill property tax for 10 years. It’s expected to general $4.78 million annually to help the department pay for its equipment and facilities. The current tax ends in 2019.

Fire Protection District No. 8, encompassing the parts of west bank south of Westwego, is also asking for a 25-mill property tax renewal for 10 years. The current tax lapses in 2020. The tax is expected to generate $7.57 million annually for fire fighting equipment and facilities.

Westwego residents will consider the 10-year renewal of a 7-mill property tax that pays ambulance service within the city. Collections from the millage are anticipated to total $434,000 annually. The existing tax will expire at the end of this year.

On Election Day in New Orleans, people line up to cast their ballots at the fire station in the 400 block of South Jefferson Davis Parkway on Nov. 6, 2018. (Photo by Michael DeMocker, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune)

Orleans Parish

New Orleans voters are considering a change to the city’s home rule charter that would alter the makeup of the Sewerage & Water Board, slightly undoing a change made in 2013.

Back then, the impetus was to bring more technical expertise to the utility’s governance. To make room, three seats held City Council members were removed from board, shrinking it from 13 to 11 positions. The mayor, who leads the board as its president, was also given power to name eight “citizen” board members with backgrounds applicable to drainage, sewage and water system oversight. Nominations for these seats came from the city’s university presidents.

Since those changes, frequent boil water advisories and last summer’s flooding have increased calls for accountability. The resulting proposal would replace one of the mayor’s appointees with the chair of the City Council’s Public Works Committee. The chairman could also appoint another committee member or a civil engineer to the Sewerage & Water Board.

New Orleans voters also will decide who takes the Division E seat on Orleans Parish Civil District Court. Omar Mason and Marie Williams advance to the Dec. 8 runoff. Both are Democrats who’ve previously run for a spot on the court bench.

Also, residents of the Touro Bouligny neighborhood will decide whether to renew a security district tax of 16.2 mills for eight years. The current tax expires at year’s end, and the renewed millages is expected to generate $470,000 annually for supplemental security services.

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Polling commissioners move voting machines across a lunchroom floor as they get ready for Election Day at Laurel School in New Orleans on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2016. (Photo by Chris Granger, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)

Plaquemines Parish

A runoff will settle the Plaquemines Parish president’s race, with challenger Kirk Lepine facing incumbent Amos Cormier III. Lepine almost took the Nov. 6 election outright with 48 percent of the vote.

St. Bernard Parish

A home rule charter change would extend term limits for the St. Bernard Parish Council members from two terms to three.

Rochelle Boesen votes at the registrar of voters office inside the Percy Hebert Building in LaPlace in during the early voting period for the October 2008 election.

St. John the Baptist Parish

There’s one runoff remaining for the St. John the Baptist Parish School Board, the District 11 race between Lisa Tregre-Wilder and Clarence Triche.

Parish voters are also being asked to rededicate a 0.96-mill property tax for public health units, allowing its use to be expanded slightly for St. John’s medical and public health facilities and services. The tax is estimated to generate $380,000 annually and will be collected through 2027.

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Voters head to machines at Carolyn Park Middle School in the Bayou Liberty/Slidell area on Nov. 4, 2008. (Photo by Ellis Lucia, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune)

St. Tammany Parish

The runoff for the Slidell-area House District 90 features Mary DuBuisson and John Raymond. They are seeking to complete the remainder of the term of Greg Cromer, who stepped down after he was elected Slidell’s mayor.

Two seats are unsettled on the St. Tammany Parish School Board: Districts 8 and 11.

The runoff for Abita Springs mayor pits incumbent Greg Lemons against Dan Curtis. It was Curtis who earned the most votes in the Nov. 6 election, pulling 29 percent support to Lemons' 27 percent.

For Pearl River police chief, Chris Culotta meets Jack Sessions in the runoff.

There’s is one parishwide issue on the ballot: The renewal of a 1-mill tax for the animal shelter. That tax, for 10 years, brings in an estimated $2,021,348 annually.

In the Pearl River area, Fire District No. 11 seeks the renewal of 10 mills. The tax, which brings in around $351,000 annually, would be for 10 years.

Drainage District No. 4 covers the Kingspoint South, New Kingspoint, Spring Hill, Pinehurst and Foxhollow neighborhoods in the Slidell area. Its residents are being asked to renew an annual $96 parcel fee for five years. The money, an estimated $116,000 annually, goes toward maintaining the area’s drainage equipment and features and paying the salaries of its operation and office staff.